Published January 1, 2017 | Version v1
Journal article Open

HOW COSTLY ARE BORROWING COSTS? AN ANALYSIS OF ALTERNATIVE FISCAL POLICIES DURING CRISES

Creators

  • 1. Sabanci Univ, Istanbul, Turkey

Description

Financial crises lead to substantial declines in output and consumption in emerging markets. The fact that fiscal policy is procyclical in these countries shows that the effects of a crisis are exacerbated by spending cuts and tax increases, which are usually attributed to borrowing constraints they face in bad times. This paper quantitatively analyzes the costs of reduced borrowing during crises by studying the effects of expansionary fiscal policies that would have been possible to implement, had the government been able to borrow more. The model shows that a 25% reduction of taxes on labor income, capital income, and consumption during the 1997 Korean crisis would have required an additional borrowing of 4.10% of GDP, while increasing output and consumption by 5.23 and 5.92 percentage points, respectively. When the effects of each tax rate are analyzed separately, labor tax reduction turns out to be more effective than the other policies.

Files

bib-86b4703b-cad4-427b-b729-646aa874373a.txt

Files (149 Bytes)

Name Size Download all
md5:4befa9943e115c6c9ac7ee10110b7648
149 Bytes Preview Download